chapter - ii kenyashodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/16062/9... · comprises the gikuyu,...
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2 Moombi
CHAPTER - II
MAN'S FIRST UMBILICAL CORDS
KENYA
1 The Republic of Kenya - abode of Gikuyu and
- is an ancient land, lying on the east-central
coast of Africa, across the Equator and encompassing 8ome
of the most arid as well as most fertile parts of Africa
within its geographical bounds of 5,82,644
kilometers. Bordered in the north by Sudan and Ethiopia,
in the east by Somalia and the Indian ocean, in the south
by Tanzania and in the west by Uganda, Kenya is a former
British colony which at one time was known as East Af1 ican
Protectorate. Its present 15,000,000 slror1g population
comprises the Gikuyu, the Luo, the Luhya, the Kamba, the
Meru, the Kisii, the Embu, the Kipsigis, the Kalenjin and
the Masai as major tribes. Besides, about 30,000 Europeans
and 1,20,000 Asians also live in Kenya.
1. The name Kenya derives from the word 'Kirinyaga' which is the Gi kuyu name for Mount Kenya. Fo1· details see Barnett and Njama, Mau Mau from Within (New York, 1966), p.5.
2. According to a Gikuyu myth, Gikuyu and Moombi were the first couple to appear in this part of the world. For more details see Jomo Kenyatta, Facing Mount Kenya (London,l938), Pndace. This and all subsequent rtferences are from the 1G79 edition published by Heinemann Educational Buuks Ltd.
I~
Anthropologists would have us believe that man
first appeared on earth in these parts of Africa, as also
in many other parts of the continent, 'about a million 3
years ago'. Once again, like in other parts of the
world, the people in this region too passed through
various stages of development:
We have vast quantities of the tools and
weapons of stone with which they armed
themselves, and one of the most striking
things about these is their amazing
similarities in type to the stone Wedpons
of the men who inhabited Europe at about 4
the same time.
A fairly stable society, split into what wero
probably several tribal divisions with variations of th~
same general culture seems to have come about during the
Stone Age, when several groups lived near the lakes and
rivers surviving exclusively on shell-fish, while others
lived in jungles with antelops as the principal source of
their food:
Archaeology has shown that early in the
first millennium B.C. a food-producing
------------------·------------------------------- -~-----3. Fo1 details about this see H.B.S. Leaky, Kenya
Contrasts and Problems (London, 1936). 4. Ibid., p.36.
population established itself in
central part of the Rift Valley and in the
highlaods to the west of it, a population
which lived b/ hunting and pastoralism,
making good pottery and basketty and
carving stone bowls and platters,
grindstones and pestles for pounding wild 5
vegetable food.
These inhabitants of Kenya seem to have soon come in
contact with traders from some of the civiliaed countries
of that time, su~h as Egypt, Greece, Persia and India.
Discovery of coloured glass beads of Egyptian and
Mesopotamian origin at the excavation sites lends credence
to the speculation that probably these traders came tu
Kenya for spices, ivory and gold and exchanged them for
these beads. In all probablity, it is these traders who
first introduced agriculture and domesti~ation of animals
to the people of this period. By this time, the
inhabitants, unlike their ancestors, had aJso given up
living in the caves and had learnt to build circular huts.
Although the original inhabitants of Kenya may have been
dark skinned and curly haired, they were definitely quite
5. Roland Oliver ed., The Cambridge History of Africa (Cambridge, 1977) Vol.III, 652.
different from the present-day Kenyans, who are in most
probability a product of the (ntermingling of the Stone
Age agriculturists with the invading negro stock from
neighbouring Sudan.
There were norclasses in Kenyan society at that
time. There were only different ethnic groups with varied
styles of political and economic organisations. Because of
lack of means of communication, they lived in isolation of
each other. The mode of production was subsistence
oriented and was based on communal system of labour
utilisation which was either voluntary or obligatory or
both. Each tribe was a distinctive unit, generally managed
by the tribe-elders, as was th~ case with the Gikuyu, for
instance.
Land tenure was a complex affair. While land was
not saleable, each adult had rights to its use which was
controlled by the tribal authority. A member had a
temporary right of use on a piece of land, which ceased
shifting when he moved to another assigned area under the
cultivation system. Some tribes, however, had recognised
individual rights though of a rather complex nature and
permitted sales. Such was the case with the Gikuyus.
More recent history of Kenya, however, begins
with the first year A.D. when the people of the region
l.±i.J
were overcome after stiff r~sistence, b/ the Bantus, who
occupied the principal coastal areas of present Kenya,
Tanzania and Moz~mbique. The first colonisation of these
p eo p 1 e a 11 d of the ·co as t d 1 r e g i o n beg a n w {t h- the a.r r iva 1 of
Arab Muslims both Shias and Sunnis - in the eighth
century, who came to propagate Islam but stayed on to
trade in ivory, gold, timber, iron and black slaves:
Archaelogical evidence makes it almost
certain that in the ninth century there was
an imp:.rtant Isla:illc town on Mc>.nda island, 6
t...thich is very close i'nshore.
In course of time a number of independent city states
mostly ruted by Arabs - came up all along the coast from
Mogadishu to Kilwa. Most of the Arab influen~~ was,
however, confined to the coastal areas only and there is
nv evidence of a similar contact with the natives of the
interior. In the words of Oliver-
6.
The reasons for this strange disjunction
between coast and inte1 ior are in large
measure geographical. Behind the narrow
coastal plain, the land rises towards the,
great central plateau in shelf after shelf
Oliver, The Cambridge History op . cit . , p . 19 7 .
of Africa
of dry thorn scrub, hard to inhabit and 7
difficult to eros~. -
By the middle of the 15th century, th~ Portuguese
who had by then become a major colonfal power and who were
looking_ for controlling the sources of 'exotic products of
Orient' for trade purposes, "made their first the
penetr~tion of the coast .... in their search for gold and 8
spieces and began to expand their sla,Je t1·ade." In doing
so, they drove the Arab rulers from the coastal areas of
Keflta, Somalia aPd Tc.nza,,ia, whic~; they co;!L..Lnued to I
occupy and exploit for the ne~t 200 yea~s. But the chief
purpose of the Portuguese control of East African coast
~.Jas "to rnai ntai n a base on th~ way to the East ... Th1s is
signified by the fact that for almost the entire period of
Portuguese ascendancy, officials in East Africa received 9
their orders from the Viceroy in Goa." Some of these
areas were recaptured by the Arabs towards the end of the
18th century. The beginning of 19th century, however, saw
more European powers, particularly the British, the
Germans and the French become more interested in Africa in
g~neral and the East Coast particularly. A number of --------------------.--------------------------------------. 7. Oliver, The C4tabrid9e History of Africa,
op .cit. ,p .621. 8. Dvo-rak, I . , (trans. ) , Non Aligned Countries
(London,l982), p.373. 9. Oliver, The Cambridge History of Africa op.cit.
p.227.
explors-r;:::; diiJ missiona1·ies travelled into the interior and
made contacts with the Africans. A number of _ these
missions were unde-rtaken with the intention of locating
the source of the river Nile for its eventual control for
strategic reasons.
Towards the end of Nineteenth century, European
i ntet-ests in the continent had reached competitive
proportions. In a conference held in Berlin, in 1884-85,
in which Britain, Germany, France, Belgium, Spain,
Po,·t·;8al, Italy, A'"'· t r o-H u n s <: r i a n Empire,
participated, it was decided to 'partition Africa' .
Germany and Britain, however, continued to clash over
supremacy in East Africa. E0entually it was agreed that
the Lake Victoria will form the boundry between their
areas of influence. The territories lying north of the
lake -- Kenya and Uganda came under the British
control, while the territories lying south of the lake
langyanika --became the German domain. The British
government, however, ·chose not to administer these areas
directly. A tradins company:- The Imperial British East ..... ._; ..
Africa Company -- was founded in 1888 through the granting
of a Royal Charter to Sir William Mackinnon, a shlpping
magnet. Besides Kenya and Uganda, a ten mile strip of the
East Coast was obtained from the Sultan of Zanzibar on
lease. The company, it was claimed, had been 'formed for
the purpose of pushing forward the civilisation of 10
Africa. ' The modus oprendi of this colonisation in the
name of civilisation was once again the same as in Asia:
eventual political control in the guise of trade.
The company, however, had to face stiff
resistence from the Africans and it soon ran into
financial rough weather and in order to overcome this, it
was decided to strike inland for Uganda. But this brought
in another problem : the 700 odd miles route from the
coast to Uganda lay through different patches of desert as
well as steep slopes with hardly any significant
habitation enroute. Thus the trade, particularly in ivor~
became extremely expensive on account of high coste of
transportation. It was then decided to construct a railway
right from Mombasa upto Lake Victoria. During its
construction which was being done with the help of labour
force brought from India, the company had to bear huge
financial burdens particuarly as it had once again to
fight African resistence during the laying down of the
railway track in the hinter land. Eventually, the company
became bankrupt and sought to withdraw from the region
completely. Then, for ·wider strategic considerations, a
10. E .A. Ranians and others The Cambridge History of British Empire,(Cambridge, 1956), Vol.III ,p.l68.
11B I
Protectorate over Uganda was subsequently proclaimed in 11
June, 1894." The company gradually wound itself. Its
Charter was annulled in 1895, thereby leaving a vaccum in
the administration of the coast, particularly the strip
leased from the Sultan of Zanzibar. To fill this, the East
Africa Protectorate was proclaimed in 1895, with Lord
Hardinge as its first commissioner. Immediately after
taking over, Hardinge had to face a revolt from the
coastal tribes, particularly the Mazrui. However, by 1896
the British control over the area had stabilised, and the
work on the railway was progressing smoothly.
Big game hunters and explorers passing to and
from Uganda had been particularly struck by vast tracts of
fertile land in the Rift Valley region. Among such
travellers was one Captain Lugard who dreamt of large
scale agricultural farming and stock raising sine~ -some
of the land is unoccupied and much of the nominally 12
occupied land .... isn't being used.- Similar sentiments
were expressed by Lord Delamare who had visited the area
on a shooting expedition in 1898.
The principal inhabitants of this region, which
later came to be known as 'White highlands', were the ----------------------------------------------------------11. George Bennet, Kenya : A Political History
(London, 1983), p. 3. 12. Elspeth Huexely and Margery Perham, Race and
Pol i tica in Kenya.( London, 1944), p. 43.
Gikuyu who were primarily agriculturists. Towards the end
of 19th century, owing to almost simultaneous occurence of
a series of disasters like drought, famine and smallpox, a
large section of the population had been decimated and the
Gikuyu were forced to fall back, leaving vast areas of
land uncultivated, which as mentioned above were noticed
by travellers and explorers.
With the completion of the railway in 1901, the
idea of European settlement in the area was taken up in
earnest so that "the traffic derived from settlement 13
would make the railway a profitable undertaking." This
together with the transfer of the Eastern province of
Uganda, where most of the highlands were situated, to the
East African protectorate in 1902, further ~trengthened
the possibility of non-African settlement. Harry Johnston,
who was then the Special Commissioner for Uganda initially
proposed to develop th~ area as 'a whit~ man's country'.
Reports of the fertility of the land sent out by
the administrators to South Africa and attracted a number
of Europeans and as per the available records, the first
batch of settlers mainly from Great Britain and South
Africa arrived in 1902. These settlers occupied large
13. C.H. Gann and P. Duignan, White Settlers in Tropical Africa. (London, 1962), p. 61 .
chunks of fertile land for both farming and trading.
Through a number of Ordinances, the government reserved
the Highlands exclusively for the white Europeans.
excluding the native Africans and Indians. Thus through
these Ordinances, reserving the Highlands for the
Europeans, the colonial administration had sown the seeds
of racial discrimination and eventual racial conflict on
the Kenyan soil a conflict not only between the
Europeans and the Africans but also between the Europeans
and the Indians who had in the meantime became "artisans,
carpenters, masons, small contractors, quarry ma5ters,
dealers in lime, sand stone and domestic firewood,
barbers, pedlere, boot makere, nursery-men, tailors and 14
occasionaly land owners."
The principal sufferers were of course the
Gikuyu, since it was they who primarily inhabited the area
and who were dislocated more than once after their land
had been 'alienated' -- a more appropriate expression
would be 'misappropriated' and given away to the
European settlers literally for a song. As the land-lust
of the settlers increased, other tribes were deprived of
their land as well. The Masai, the Nandis and the Kissiis
too suffered through removal to far-flung areas labelled
14. Vijay Gupta, Kenya Politic• of (In) Dependence, ( De 1 hi , 1 981 ) , p . 9 .
as 'native reserves'. A series of land legislations
Land Regulations of the East Africa (1897), Indian Land
Acquieion Act (1896), East Africa Land Acquisition Order
(1901) and the Crown Lande Ordinance (1902)- provided the
government with control of all land in Kenya and parts of
Uganda for selling, granting lease or otherwise disposing
of.
Land grab was not the only problem brought about
by the colonial policy of European settlement. The
settlers wanted a constant supply of cheap or free labour
to work on these farms and with the African reluctance to
work for outsiders i.e. European farmers, they found it
increasingly difficult to obtain cheap labour. The
African's reluctance was due to the fact that their basic
needs were provided by the subsistence economy and
moreover, they did not want to work for the colonialists.
In those cases where African settlements became part of
European acquired lands, the Africans were declared
squatters with permission to cultivate a small plot of
land on the farm premises and to keep members of the
family as well as a few cattle. Appalling working
conditions, and severe restrictions on both the physical
movements of the squatters and also on the number of
cattle they could keep and the kind of crop they could
I~
cultivate were definitely oppressive. Moreover, the wages
were abysmally low. They were subjected to most cruel
punishments on the flimsiest of excuses. In fact, their
plight in many ways was worse than their brethern who had
been sold as slaves in the Americas by the Arabs and the
Europeans. The result was that as in other countries of
Tropical Africa, labour force in Kenya was created by
'methods of extra economic coercion.' In the words of
Haily:
A complete history of this aspect of labour
development would comprise .... slavery,
direct ststutory compulsion, pressure
through the fmposition of personal tax, the
curtailment of nstive lsnds, assistance
given by administrative officials to the
efforts of private recruiters and the use
of chiefs to recruit their people as 15
labourers.
The E••t African Standard, a newspsper of the European
settlers, in an editorial on 4th February, 1913, pleaded
openly for such coercion:
15. M. Haily, An African Survey, A Study of Problema Arising in Africa South of Sahara (London,1945), p.636.
We consider that taxation is the only
possible method of compelling the native to
leave his reserve for the purpose of
seeking work. Only in this way can the cost
of living be increased for the native.
A year before, Lord Delamere in his submission before the
Labour Commission of 1912, had strongly demanded that the
land reserves for the natives be cut "so as to prevent
them from having enough for a self-supporting level of 16
production."
In fact, the settler~. with the help of
successive government legislations "seized more than 7.6
million acred of most fertile land. Yet even close before
the and of the colonial period only 18% of this land was 17
cultivated" while millions of Africans strived to eke
out a living in highly congested reserves.
These steps together with prohibitive rates of
poll and hut taxes led to massive migration of peasants in
search of a living. This led to further problem~ in the
native reserves. from which most able-bodied males were
absent, earning money as wage-labourers, for paying
----------------------------------------------------------16. Barnett and Njama, op.cit., p.32. 17. Y.M. Ivanov, Agrarian Reforms and Hired Labour in
Africa. (Moscow ,1979), p. 14.
personal taxes. Not only did it cause physical hardships
for peasants who "walked large distances, -sometimes 18 -
hundreds of miles, for many weeks and sometim-es months"
but it also "stripped the African-village of its most
efficLent labour force, leaving mainly old men, women and 19
children."
Barnett and Njama sum up the plight of migrant
labourers in the following words:
When one adds to the European land, tax and
wages policies, the restrictions placed
upon African cultivation of certain
profitable cash crops such as Arabica
coffee, and thr- Kipande or labour
registration system which obliged African,
on pain of imprisonment, to obtain the
signatures of the1r employers when they
wished to seek other work or return to the
reserves, it is not difficult to understand
the emergence in Kenya of land hungry 20
labour exporting African peasantries.
' came The European settlers, many of whom from
---------~-----------------------------------------------t8. Ivanov, op.cit., p.23. 19. Ibid.,p.23. 20. Barnett and Njama, op.cit., p.37.
South Africa and hence had developed extreme racial views,
sought to coerce -- the right w6rd should be blackmail --
first the Protectorate Commissioner and later the Cotonial
Admi ni-st rat ion into granting them not only maximum
concessions in matters of iand, labour and taxation but
also for a share in administration. "From the beginning of
Administration into ·granting them not only maximum
.concessions in matters of land, labour and taxation but
also for a share in administration the European settlers
strove for self government which of course in practice 21
meant minority rule." This clamouring for a share in the
administration led to an early confrontation between the
white settlers and the government. In most such cases,
however, it was the government which gave in, thanks to
~he complicity of the earlier commission~rs and Governors,
many of whom shared the South African background with the
settlers.
As early as 1902, the settlers -- only twenty two
in number -- formed a committee to negotiate with the
government on various issues. Their memorandum to Charles
Eliot, the then Commissioner, included demands for more
freehold land for settlers, more cheap black• labour
through coercive government legislation, stoppage of any
21. Vijay Gupta, op.cit., p.lO.
1~6 I
further Indian immigration and disallowance of sale of
land in the High-lands to either Indians or Africans and
above all the setting up of an advisory council. "In their
marked hostility to the Indians. the Europeans were thus
early beginning the fir5t racial struggle of 22
Kenya
politics." Eliot. who had no understanding of African
customs and way of life and was openly contemptuous of the
local Africans because "they shocked him by their
barbarity and their nudity• assured the settlers of the
government policy to promote European settlement. He also
floated the idea of setting up a legislative council with
some unofficial members of non-African origin. In fact, so
blatantly did Eliot favour the South Africans as a source
of European settlement that his deputy Jackson. was forced
to complain against it to the foreign office that "the
Protectorate was becoming a haunt of "nigger• and game
shooters, that the majority of the ••ttlers were a lot of 23
'Scalligwags•·. Eliot. then. was the Progenitor of the
white settlement in Kenya. He was supported by Lord
Delamere, who had become the leader of a European
Settlers' body- The Planters' and Farmers' Association.
Incidentally. Delamere had also earlier opposed, through
22. Bennett. op.cit .• p.lO. 23. Ibid., P.ll.
24 the publication of a pamphlet the settlement of Jews in
East Africa- a proposal which never materialised. Eliot,
who in reserving land for exclusive white settlers seems
to have acted without proper authorisation from London,
was eventually forced to resign when his negotiations with
two South Africans, Robert Chamberlain and A.S. Flemmer
for grant of land in the Masailand in the Rift Valley
region was disallowed by the foreign office. Once again,
he expressed his contempt for the Africans in his
communication to Lansdown:
... There can be no doubt that the Masai and
many other tribes must go under. It is a
prospect which I view with equanimity and a
clear conscience ... (Masaidom) is a beastly
bloody eystem founded on raiding and 25
immorality.
Again. it was Eliot who in hie farewell speech at Mombasa.
urged the settlers to strive for •some local government'
for strengthening the paramountcy of white interests.
thereby launching them on a path of further confrontation
24. The full title of the pamphlet was "The Grant of land to the Zionist Congress and Land Settlement in East Africa.' This was proposed by the British government to solve the problem of settlement of jews. The other place proposed was, surprisingly, Kashmir in India.
25. George Bennett, op.cit., p.15.
with the colonial government.
The Hasai were soon removed from the Rift Valley
to Laikipia district by the new governor, Sir Donald
Steward, although the foreign office in London continued
to claim that 'the primary duty of Great Britain in East
Africa is the welfare of the native races'. It can perhaps
be inferred from the above that the policies of the
British government were janus-faced which through their
various actions intended to destroy the economic life of
Africans by turning them into mere labourers but continued
to claim itself as the defenders of Africans' welfare.
Soon the settlers got the first opportunity for a direct
say in the administration when a committee to consider the
Lend Laws was appointed and to which not only a member of
the Planters' and Farmers' Aseociatlon was nominated but
the committee itself was headed by Lord Delamere.
The settlere felt further encouraged when on
April 1, 1905 the Protectorate was transferred from the
foreign office to the Colonial office, eomething which
they had been demanding, hoping for less interference by
the London rulers. Emboldened, the settlers coined the
slogan 'no taxation without representation'. Finally,
Legislative Council was granted, although Churchill
the colonists' Association :
the
told
Never before in colonial experience has a
Council been granted where the number of 26
settlers is so few.
In the new system, the Commissioner was redesignated as
Governor and the two Councils - and Executive and a
Legislative were set up. The Legislative Council
consisted of five officials from the Executive Council and
three unofficials, to be nominated. In the first
nominations, two Europeans and an Indian A.M. Jeevanjee
w~re nominated. The Europeans were, however. not
satisfied and wanted elected representation instead of
nominations. They were also opposed to the nomination of
an Indian because they felt that they could represent the
interests of both Indians and Africans as well.
The very first meeting of the Legislative Council
discussed among others the Steward Land Committee Report
and decided to reserve the White Highlands for Europeans
only and also decided for the registration of natives who
were squatters on the European farms. Thus the settlers
were able to obtain significant concession in the very
first meeting of the Council, which whetted their appetite
for demanding more concessions, including elected official
representation on the Council. They had earlier won
26. East Africa Standard, 23 November, 1907, cited in Bennett, op.cit., p.22.
I £c·l
another major victory when a 'Masters and Servants
Oridnance' had been promulgated in 1906, allowing among
other things 'imprisonment of labourers for breach of 27
contract.'
A Secretary for Native Affairs was appointed to
deal specailly with the problem of labour supply. The
measures suggested by the Secretary were grossly misused
by the settlers, as a result of which the labour supply
diminished considerably in spite of the coercive methods
used by the village chiefs at the instance of the
government. The settlers led by Delamere 'advocated the
use of whip and acknowledged using it' to discipline the
natives and demanded Pass Laws and increased taxation for
flushing out more labour. The Native Labour Commissioner,
appointed in 1912, recommended, among others that a system
of personal identification for the natives -- a euphemism
for bonding them to forced labour -- be adopted and the
tax on natives increased. The latter fact would force them
to work as labourers for earning the money to be paid as
tax.
The settlers also launched a frontal attack on
the government's policy on Indian immigration since it was
from the Indians that they immediately felt threatened.
---------------------------------------------------------27. Bennett,op.cit., p.24.
I~
Thus they demanded restrictions on Indian immigration,
segregation_ in land allotment, a ban on employment of
Indians- in government jobs and exclusion of Indians from
voting rights. This created quite a controversy which is
generally known as 'the India Question~.
As a counter to the threat by the white
settlers, the Indians formed the East African Indian
National Congress, demanding 'in the fullest degree
perfect equality in the eyes of the law' with their
European fellow settlers.
With the outbreak of the war, which led to
constitutional advance in almost all British colonies, the
settlers put more pressure on the government by bycotting
the Legislative Council unless elected representation was
granted to the Europeans. ~lthough Henry Belfield, the
then governor, gave it his support, the London office
turned it down on the plea that it talked of only one
section, and that too of a very minor section, namely the
white settlers.
Captain Grogan, a hawkish settler of South
African origin, whipped up the war hysteria, which
resulted in the appointment of a War Council on· which
three settlers, including Grogan, were appointed. The
Council soon strengthened the European position, although
its function was limited and was purely advisory in
nature. The most important gain was the appointment of
three settlers to the War Council after election by three
separate electroal divisions of the Europeans. The
settlers felt that their demand for elected representation
had been conceded in principle and it was a matter of time
only before it would be extended to the Legislative
Council. A committee appointed in this regard recommended
that voting rights be granted only to 'every male British
subject of European origin on proof of twelve months' 28
continuous residence.' The committee did not find it
desirable to extend the franchise to Asians and Africans,
since they outnumbered the whites and would vote 'solid'.
It was recommended that ten European electoral areas be
delineated for election, two Indians be nominated and the
Africans and the Arabs be represented by the Chief Native
Commissioner and the Resident Magistrate at Mombasa
respectively. However, no action was taken on the
recommendations.
This highlighted the obvious discriminatory
nature of the recommendations, thereby building a case for
social discrimation in Kenya. Incidentally this was the
most unique case of perverse logic ... voting rights to a
miniscule minority. They were probably working on the same
28. Bennett, op.cit., p.39.
lines as in South Africa, where white minority rule had
already been imposed on a overwhelming vast majority of
black Africans.
The settlers found an ardent ally in the new
Governor, Edward Northey, who soon after his arrival
announced that 'the principle had been accepted at home
that his country was primarily for European Development'
and that 'European interests must be paramount throughout
the Protectorate'. This attitude of the Governor
emboldened the settlers to take a more hostile stance
against both tho Indians and the Africans, which evoked
protests not only from the Indians and Africans but also
from the white Christian missionaries who had hitherto
restrained the Africans in the name of christian virtues
of patience and sacrifice. The memorandum submitted by
Rev. Dr. Arthur of the Church of Scotland on the notorius
'Northey circulars' on labour recruitment evoked a sharp
reaction in the British parliament which led to a
directive to the Governor that the officials were 'to take 29
no part in recruiting labour for private employment.
By now the Africans were 6ufficiently alarmed
about the settlers' conspiracy to annex their land
29. Despatch to the Governor Protectorate, 5th September, Bennett, op.cit, p.44.
of East Africa 1921, cited in
permanently and they formed two associations to defend
their interests. The first -- The Kikuyu Association 30
(K.A.) --was formed in 1920, with the primary aim of
defending Gikuyu land. It comprised mainly of Gikuyu
Chiefs and headmen. A year later, a more broadbased and
more militant association -- The Young Kikuyu Association
(Y.K.A.) --was formed with Harry Thuku as its secretary.
Thuku, a government telephone operator, launched his
agitation against not only the policy of annexing Gikuyu
land, the 'Northey circulars' on forced labour, but also
against the policy of carrying of Kipande a card
bearing the finger-prints of the bearer -- by all African
male adulta and the doubling of the Hut and Poll tax from
5 to 10 rupees. Thuku received generous help from M.A.
Desai, an Indian leader and journalist, in running his
association. Although, he started by enrolling only the
Gikuyu, he soon extended its membership to other tribes as
well. His arrest and subsequent deportation by the
government, led to a large demonstration in Nairobi in
which over 20 Africans were killed by police firing. In a
30. The Gikuyu were referred to as 'Kikuyu' by the British and the names of their organisations were also referred to by that term. Most modern literature on the Gikuyu, however, refers to them as Gikuyu. Whenever the term occurs as a part of the name of an organisation, it will be referred to as 'Kikuyu' but elsewhere the term Gikuyu has been used.
I (.j
way this act of the government triggered off the militant
struggle by the Africans which led to the full-scale
national liberation movement and eventual independence of
Kenya in 1963. The administration tried to depoliticalise
these associations with the help of
missionaries.Archdeacon Owen, for instance, organised
Kavirando Taxpayers' Welfare Association with the aim of
planting trees, digging sanitary pits etc.
Since the controversy between the Indians and the
settlers could not be resolved and the situation was
becoming worse with each passing day, the Governor,
Coryndon, together with the leaders of the warring
factions was summoned to London for negotiations by the
new Secretary of State, Duke of Devonshire. This
eventually led to the publication of a White Paper
entitled Indiana in Kenya -- the famous Devonshire
Declaration -- in July 1923. Although the paper talked of
the interests of Europeans. Indians and Arabs which "must
be severally safeguarded", it •rediscovered the vast
majority of 31
Africans•.
Kenya's population namely the
The declaration set at rest, once
native
for all ,
the controversy regarding the dominance of Kenya by
31. W.K. Hancock, SUrvey of British Commonwealth Affairs, Vol.I, (London,1937), p.224.
declaring that "Primarily Kenya is an African
territory ... the interests of the African natives must be
paramount". It also added that the British government's
trust on behalf of the Africans was which could not be
delegated or shared:
The declaration had three aims by
declaring the African interests paramount
it aimed at silencing the Indians and
Europeans. It also aimed at confusing the
liberals of England who supported the
Africans. It expected to lead the Africans
into believing that since the British
government herself was looking after their
welfare they need not fight for it. The
British government, it was stated was the 32
trustee of African interests in Kenya.
However, this unequivocal declaration provided
the most timely fillip to the Africans who had earlier
launched a struggle through the Kikuyu Association (K.A.)
and the Young Kikuyu Association (Y.K.A.) and it also
forced the settlers to change their strategy by demanding
a federation or 'closer union', as it came to be called,
of the British African territories.
32. Vijay Gupta, op.cit., p.13-14.
I 01- I
Naturally, this evoked a strong reaction from the
Indians who non-cooperated by withdrawing from the
elections for the Legislative Council and who nursed a
suspicion that the Hilton Young Commission which had been
sent to examine the feasibility of a federation was
nothing but an eye wash for foisting European control over
the whole of East Africa.
Thuku's Y.K.A. which had been banned after his
arrest and subsequent demonstrations, reappeared in 1925,
under the new name Kikkuyu Central Association (K.C.A.).
Its appearance had coincided with the transfer of
authority among the Gikuyu from one age-group to another,
an ~vent which occured once in about twenty years. The
K.C.A. immediately demanded, among others, the Africans'
right to grow coffee, the appointment of a Gikuyu
Paramount Chief, the publication of laws in Gikuyu
language and the release of Harry Thuku. It also demanded
direct representation by twelve Africans on the
Legislative Council since the Europeans had neither 'true
sympathy' nor 'thorough contact' with the people. They
also expressed their fears about the security of title of
their land after the Crown Lands Ordinance of 1915.
Meanwhile, the idea about fixing the boundries of the land
reserved for natives was being discussed seriously and
Grigg proposed, through a Bill, the appointment of a Board
of Trustees for this purpose. But the whole exercise was
suspended till the publication of the Hilton Young
Commission report. The report, published in January, 1929,
not only reiterated the Devonshire Paper's claim of native
paramountcy but it also gave a rebuff to the settlers'
plans to grab the whole of British East Africa unde1- the
garb of 'closer union'. The report stated that "what the
immigrants communities may justly claim is Parternship, 33
not control. . The Commission also advocated the
appointment of a High Commission for East Africa regarding
matters of common concern. Moreover, the Commission urged
•that for election purposes, 'a common roll on an equal
franchise with no diecrimination between races' be used_
The report, therefore, gave a big blow to yet another
design of the settlers to gain control over Kenya, mainly
because of Kenya's strategic importance.
The new labour government in Britain amended
Grigg's Land Reservation Bill for the Natives to include d
provision, in spite of strong protests from the settlers,
to reserve for the natives "Land equal in extent, and, as 34
far as possible, equal in value" if any were taken away
by the state. The Bill was finally passed with the
33. Bennett, op.cit., p.66. 34. Command 3234 ( 1929), p.39-4l.
official majority since the settlers voted against it.
This was considered a victory for the K.C.A. which had
made such a demand in its very first memorandum.
In the meantime, yet another confrontation broke out, this
time between the missionaries and the Africans. In 1929,
the Church of Scotland condemned the tribal practice of
female circumcision -- a form of clitoridectomy as
'savage' and 'barbarous'. Female circumcision was a custom
which was regarded by the Gikuyu as also by many other
tribes, as an essential element of their sociel structure.
The issue was immediately taken by the KCA and it held
large meetings in the Gikuyu reserves, highlighting the
condemnetion as yet another etteck on their wey of life by
the Europeans, since the missionaries threatened to debar
from church those prectising femele circumcision and
polygamy and also disallow the children of such parents
from obteining educetion in missionary schools. Most
schools, ae we know were at that time run by Christian
missions. It, therefore, called
missionaries doing 'the wonderful
the bluff of
job, at least
the
in
educating Africans'. The Africans went to the extent of
setting up their own African Church and Independent
African Schools, both of which institutions were to play a
very crucial role in the Kenyan struggle for national
independence. The controversy also provided an excellent
opportunity to Jomo Kenyatta, the general Secretary of the
KCA, to increase the sphere of the influence of his
organisation as well as to project himself as a leader. He
addressed big political meetings which helped the
organisation in enrolling new members and collecting money
for the struggle.
The British government, under the Labour party
now, disturbed by the difficult Kenya position, issued a
Memorandum on Native Policy in East Africa which stated
among others that responsible government was the goal in
'Kenya as elsewhere'. Since less than one per cent people
had been enfranchised at that time, the trusteeship must
rest with His Majesty's government 'alone' and thoirs mu5t
be 'the ultimate deci•ion and final control'. Since this
in most blunt terms ended the dream of an independent
settler-governed etate, it evoked a very sharp reaction
from the settlers. With the end of settlers' search for
self-government, Kenyatta's departure for Britain and the
enforcing of 'firm administrative measures against
Africans', political activities, there followed in early
1930s, e period of lull in the political history of Kenya.
The Europeans now under the leadership of Francis Scott in
the new Council turned their attention to gaining control
over the financial affairs of the colony. Here too they
suffered a setback as a committee appointed by the
parliament advocated that the additional revenue be raised
from the non-natives through income tax. Similarly,
another commission to survey the land situation made
recommendations which drew protests from the settlers.
Besides recommending additions to the native reserves, it
proposed delimitation of the Highlands. This then was the
second major blow to the settlers who had earlier lost the
battle for self-government. Other African grievances,
however, received little government attention inspite of
Archdeacon Burn's passioned pleas and Indian settler
leader Ishar Dass's strong advocacy for their favourable
consideration.
As the fever of another world war mounted in the
mid-thirties, the Italians invaded Ethiopia, bringing war
into the East African theatre. The government rai5ed a
regular Kenya Regiment. Simultaneously, the settlers
exerted fresh pressure on the government for changes in
the constitution and the introduction of the post of 'a
sort of minister' to be held by unofficials. This was a
clever move to shift the fight from the Legislative
Council where the settlers seemed to have been defeated
once for
C.a"·.:·ndish
a 11 . The settlers
Bentinck pressed for
under the
defining
leadership
Highlands
of
for
Europeans which would have legally enforced colour bar,
being practised de facto in matters of land allotment.
However, · the government order in this regard issued -in
1939, cleverly avoided the use of the ~ord 'European' with
'Highlands'.
The joint fight by the Indians and the Africans
against this order helped in strengthening the unity
between them which had earlier been brought about through
contacts among the trade union leaders. The government
tended to overlook the strength of the African
asso~iations. The government decisinn i1~ 1938, t: destr0y
thuu"-and::, of cattle heads bel~,nging tc the Wa~arnba
provoked a mass protest by them and brought them in touch
with "the Gi kuyu.
At the same time, the simmering discontent over
appalling working conditions among the labour broke into a
~~11 scale strike. Makhan Sing~, ~n India, Printing Press
Worker, who had organised the Labour Trade Union of East
Africa and the K.C.A played a ~~eller role in organising
this strike which led to the appointment of a commission
to enquire into the working conditions of labour force in
~enya. "The~r report revealed governmer,t neglect in a 35
scandalous state of affairs".
With the outbreak of the war, K.C.A and other ----------------------------------------------------------35. Bennett, op.cit., p.93.
such organisations of the Kamba and Teita were banned and
their leaders arrested. The Indians and Europeans too
suspended their political activities. The settlers were,
however, strengthening their grip over the administration;
unofficials had become 'semi-official Members' and Scott
looked forward to the appointment of unofficial ministers
after the war.
The militant speeches of Rev. Beecher, who had
been appointed to the Legislative Council in August, 1943,
to represent the Africans created apprehensions in the
minds of most settlers about the foundations of
representation in the Legislative Council on the one hand
and made some wake up to the realisation of self-36
government 'on th·~ basis of 1311 races cooporating' on
the other. Couldrey in fact, went to th0 ~xtont of
demanding the nomination of an African to the Legisl13tive
Council. As a result, in October, 1944, E.M. Mathu wa~
nominated to the Legislative Council, which marked the
emergence of the African on to the full stage of Kenya's
politics, thereby giving a new form to 't.ho eternal
triangle' of Europeans, Indians and the Africar1s in Kenya.
In 1945, the new governor, Sir Philip Mitchell,
introduced proposals for the reorganisation of the
F.J. Couldrey in d BBC broadcast. 17th August ,1944.
government with the aim of bringing about racial parity
between the three races concerned. However, the
appointment of Cavendish-Bentinck, a conservative or
rather racialist leader of the white settlers as 'Member'
Agriculture gave a rude shock to the Africans and the
Indians and led to a 'racial explosion'. To assuage
their feelings, Mitchell introduced a set of proposals for
setting up a Central Assembly for inter-territorial
organisation of East Africa on the basis of racial pal-ity_
The acceptance of the proposals by the Africans ehd the
Indians only heightened the racial tension in the colony_
The post-war liberalisation had led to increased African
political activitie5 and a mon~ vocal African pre5s was
voicing their problem5 in a more forthright manner_ The
reconstituted Legislative Council with 22 unofficial
members and only 15 official members drew severe critici~m
from the Africans and the Indians while the white
settlers' hopes of yet another chance for 'std f-
government' were raised once again. As a result, the
Kikuyu African Union (K.A.U) feeling frustrated, began to
talk of a revolutionary struggle to free themselves from
the colonial yoke. It was at this stage that Kenyatta
returned to Kenya after his long stay in England and other
countries of Europe and was Accorded a hero's welcome.
' r ~ 1\ )
Kenyatta found that the country was a fertile
field for political activities because of the post-war
discontent. The war-returnees had become aware of the
national liberation movements in Asia. 37
As unemployment
grew both in the cities and in the countryside, the cry
of 'Africa for Africans' grew stronger. Overcrowding in
the reserves and extensive soil erosion had made the
Africans talk of getting back their 'stolen lands' from
the Europeans. Kenyatta began to travel around the
country and addressed large meetings. In June 1947, he
was elected the President of the Kikuyu African Union
(K.A.U) and began to attack the government policies.· For
instance, in July he chaired a large meeting in Fort Hall
wherein it was resolved "that women should no longer take
pBrt in terracing, the vital operation in e:oil
conservation. The following day no woman appeared for
work. By the end of August all communal lBbour Bmong the 38
Kikuyu was virtually at a standstill."
It might be of relevance here to point out that
Kenyatta had the reputation of being a moderate while in
England. His ex-K.C.A associates were in fact
apprehensive that he might join the government side.
37. According to Command 1030 ( 1960), there were 10000 people unemployed in Nairobi alon8.
38. Bennett, op.cit .. p.114.
IJLI
Kenyatta, therefore, took hardened postures in order to
retain his position as the leader of the Gikuyu. But the
initiative within the K.A.U was passing to a more radical
group who were ready to resort to violent means if
persuation failed and Kenyatta had neither the will nor
the courage to denounce them. One such group within the
organisation -- the Forty Group, so named because all of
them were circumcised together in 1940 began to
administer secret oaths to the Gikuyu to fight for the
freedom of their motherland. In fact, the word 'Mau Mau'
was first heard by tht:l police while invr•stigat~ing one ~-;uch
case of secret o8th-administering in Marth 1948, 1 n the
Rift valley. In the meanwhile, KenyattA was addr~ssin~
larQe Gikuyu rt~llic~s t~nalysing the• ills of f\c~nya, at tiuH.•::;
admonishing hi~ fellow Africans for their not adopt. i IN
better forms of farming but attacking the coloni£11
government for most of their problems. "Kenya would bo a
paradise", he said, "if the Europeans went back where they 39
came from."
In May 1949, the government finally conctldf."d the
longstanding African demand of abolishing tho rompulsory
carrying of Kipande by Africans. It al:=.o c~ x t endf~d
--------------------~ ~ ----.---39. Kenyatta in a SPf--e(h in M1.~ru, repc>TtPcl in East
African Standard, 20th Auqust, 1'1'1'3.
registration to all races through the enactment of an
Ordinance. The Europeans opposed it by saying that the
taking of fingerprints smacked of a totalitarian state,
ignoring the fact that such a practice had been in force ~
for the Africans for thirty years and no European had
protested against it. Labelling the Ordinance as an act
of 'appeasement' for Africans, the settlers replied by
publishing a brochure titled 'We are here to stay' wherein
they demanded a clear statement from the British
government that their settlement in Kenya was an
irreversible act and that the 81·itish would .c~lways knt:lP
the reins of government in their own hands. ThE!Y also
wanted the government to increase it.s coop(:nation with
Rhodesian and the South 1'\fr icttn gov.:·r TJnif.lllU.: both of which
were highly racial in character. This naturally evoked
protests from both the Africans and the Indians.
Prominent among those who reacted strongly were the East
African Trade Union Congress under the leadership of Fred
Kubai and Makhan Singh. The ATUC, on May 1, 1950 demanded
for the first time in Kenya, total independence. Both
Fred Kubai and Makhan Singh were arrested for being office
bearers of an 'illegal' labour organisation. Although thr:'
ensuing strike failed finally, fairly soon it furthPr
strengthened the inctAasing <:<)Operdtion hf=.tween
Africans and the Asians in Kenya. As frustration
increased and as Fred Kubai and Makhan singh were
deported, more cases of oathing were reported from all
over the country.
In 1950, the government banned the so-called Mau
Mau movement. Although Kenyatta and other so-called 40
moderates denounced the movement, it continued to gain
strength and as subsequent events were to prove,
proscribing it proved to be counterproductive for the
British government which got bogged down in it more and 41
more with each passing day.
The publication of the Beecher Committee report
on education provided the next fuel for the t3lr eady
bubbling cauldron of political unrest in the country. The
Africans demanded more grants-in-aid for raisin9 tho
standard of Independent Schools which as stated earlier
had been set up aftc"'r the missionar i0s had disallowud t.hn
children whose parents practised either polygamy or female
circumcision. Kenyatta, capitalising on th0se issues,
further strengthened his hold over the K.A.U and he began
to attack openly the Europeans, their immigration and land
40. Kenyatta did so in a big meeting of the KAU in Nairobi in February, 1951.
41. We shall discuss the details of the Mau Mau struggle in chapter - IV while discussing A Grain of Whe~t.
I.LLI
holdings. He urged the Africans "Don't be afraid to spill
your blood to get the land". His pra1se became the
subject of many a Kenyan hymn and there were rumours of
secret links between Mau Mau and K.A.U., particularly
Kenyatta, although the government had 'no concrete
evidence for it.
The Europeans started putting pressure on the
government to arrest the Gikuyu leaders and declare a
state of Emergency in order to check the so-called Mau Mau
activities, which, they alleged, were both anti-christian
and anti-European. Attacks on European farms and the
murder of a senior Chief -- Waruhiu -- neat· N~irolli made
the new Governor, Sir Evelyn Baring to declare a ~lnte of
Emergency on October 20, 1952 and immediately thereafter
Kenyatte end eleven top leaders besides others were
arrested. British troops were fl01"n in frorn E9ypt and tho
reins of decision-making passed frorn the local
administration to the government in London.
The outlawing of Mau Mau, the arrest of Kenytitta
and other African leaders and the repression it:· t loose on 42
Africans in general by the British troops and district
officials soon proved to be counter-productive. Vi o 1 ence
42. Over 10000 Afr icancs were ki !led by the Security forces and other 90000 were detained in concentration camps according to 8-'11 nAt:t. ?.. Nj-9ma.
increased,
generated
leading to more repression which in turn
more violence in reaction. The colonial
government was, therefore, caught in a vicious circle of
violence. Sentencing of Kenyatta and seven others at
Kipenguria trial in most unjust manner added more fuel to
this fire. The settlers, taking advantage of this
situation, demanded once again a share in the conducting
the emergency operations. In June 1953, the K.A.U was
also banned, creating a kind of political 'vacuum' which
once again was filled by the trade union movement under
the leadership of Tom Mboya, a young Luo. The armed
struggle, however, not only continued to be waged but
became more broad-based.
In the new Legislative Council in which for the
first time eight elected African representative5 took
their seats under the leader~hip of Tom Mboya, the
Africans shocked the Europeans by demanding self-
government on the basis of equal rights for all
individuals, as had been done in the case of Ghana, which
had obtained freedom only a few days earlier The
Africans, particularly Oginga Odinga, also demAnded the
immediate release of their leaders, particularly Kenyatta,
from imprisonment. The demand soon spread and Kenyatta
became overnight, as it were, a big hero once again. lhe
I 6: I
Africans also bycotted the Legislative Council demanding a
constitutional conference and also an African majority in
the Council. Only after obtaining such an assurance in
the House of Commons did the members return to the
Council. Soon a new organisation with Uhuru as its
principal aim was founded by the Africans with Odinga as
its President and Mboya as its Secretary. In October,
1959, the government through a Session Paper conceded the
long-standing African demand of removing racial barriers
from all spheres including non-Europeans' right to buy
land in the White Highlands. The winds of change were
blowing all over Africa in the sixties. The growing
African nationalism was gaining ground as the powers of
colonial administrations were w~ning.
As the Constitutional Conference was convened in
London in 1960, the Africans gained an effective majority
in the Legislative Council with 33 seats out of a total of
65. Africans would also have the largest number of
ministers, viz. four against three Europeans and one
Asian. This plan naturally irked the Europeans who dubbed
it as
volte
'a Victory for Mau Mau' anrl attacked the British
face.
triumphantly
Ngala,
that the
on the other hand, claimed
'European domination had been
broken'. The fond hop~) of 'Uhuru' in not so distant a
future gave a new fillip to tht- ,.fforts of Africflns.
I S?~ I
A new mass organisation - Kenya African National
Union (K.A.N.U) incorporating the members of the K.A.U was
formed in March, 1960, with Kenyatta as its President.
Gichuru was, however, to act in his place until his
release from prison. Odinga and Mboya were to be its Vice
President and Secretary respectively. However, the new
party from its very start was plagued with not only
rivalry between Odinga and Mboya but also between the
Gikuyu and other tribes. Since the leaders were mostly
from among the Gikuyu, the very objectives of K.A.N.U were
considered a suspect. Within two months Towett and Daniel
Arap Moi organised all other tribes under the name KPA
(Kalenjin Political Alliance) with the mAin aim of staking
their 'historic' claims to the Highlands, suspecting that
the Gikuyu with their majority in numbers might claim
these for thems~lves. The Masai, now stimulated into
political action, formed the HUF (Hasai United Front).
Within a month the two - K.P.A and H.U.F - had merged to form K.A.D.U with the main aim of opposing K.A.N.U.
The Europeans too in the meantime had formed two
distinct parties: United Party under the leadership of
Group Captain Briggs while Blundell formed the NKP. This
mu 1 t i p 1 i c i t y of political activity among the Africans
drew a sharp reaction from the government which turn~d
down their now loud demand of Kenyatta's release
describing him as 'the African leader to darkness and
death'.
In the 1961 elections, K.A.N.U dominated the
K.A.O.U while Blundell's party overwhelmed the Group led
by Cavendish Bentinck. Although the African leaders were
now allowed to visit Kenyatta in Lodwar but the Governor
still refused to release him until a government had been
formed and found workable. K.A.N.U, however, refused to
enter a government before Kenyatta's releese. As a
result, Ngala became the leader of Government Business
with the support of Blundell's N.K.P and Asians of K.I.C.
Soon after, Kenyatta was released. Serious differences
between K .A .N .U and K .A .0 .U now came to the f ort• t'lbout the
future of Kenya. K.A.O.U demanded the division of Kenya
into 'regions' which they thought Wt'IS necessary to protect
various tribes from Gikuyu domination. K-A.N.U .• however,
was strongly opposed to it. The ensuing Conference in
London 68W K.A.N.U. concede significant ground to K.A.O.U,
for disagreement could have meant indefinite delay in the
grt'lnting of independence.
The compromise was a 'framework constitution',
the details of which were to be worked out in the
coalition government to be formed on retur·n from London.
The en"Suing months WtHt'" fllled wit:h -:;o rnurh politic-:'!!
bitterness that it was feared by some that K.A.N.U and
K.A.D.U might fight each other on the streets. The
confusion became manyfold when it came to delimiting
regions and constitutencies. The Luo under Mboya and the
Kamba under Paul Ngei both belonging to K.A.N.U openly
disagreed with Kenyatta and the official party position on
these. K.A.N.U was in complete disarray at the end of
1962. The old rivalries had come to the fore in a
menacing way on the eve of independence.
The election, however, saw K.A.N.U score
landslide victory over K.A.D.U and on June 1,
Kenyatta became Kenya's first Prime Minister.
reason for K.A.N.U"s victory were the split and suspl:'cion
~mong the various tribes that comprised the K.A.D.U. But
more significantly, they showed the growinq nl•tion.:d
feeling !;ince regional and tribal partie•s were wip(Jd out.
The voting was fur party rathAr J..>t.11 ..:,, • n., 1 1 t y .
"Ovr:•rall,
party with ~f-At'-' Jn ~vf·rv h"PC)ion and two-thirds •·f t.hf·· 4-3
vnt ,_ .. •
-·-· --------· . ·-- . -- ----- -. -~·- ·-;-
4 3 . Ben nt:~ t t , op ' 1 t . , p . 1 '-.·~ .